UPCOMING EVENTS

Five years ago, Telltale had its breakout hit with The Walking Dead: Season One. The game was a gut-wrenching tale that forced players to make choices about who to save or who to abandon to the zombie horde. Under founders Dan Connors and Kevin Bruner, Telltale started taking on a load of new games. It expanded to more than 350 employees and started working on titles such as Batman: The Enemy Within, Minecraft: Story Mode, Game of Thrones, and others.

During 2017, the company published 17 episodes across all of its franchises. But not every one of those was as polished as it could be. Hawley has decided to scale back, take more time on each game, and focus on fewer titles. The company laid off about 90 of its employees, or about 25 percent of the staff, shrinking down the total to about 250.

Hawley, a former Zynga executive and cofounder of Red Robot Labs, replaced Dan Connors, who cofounded the company in 2004 along with Kevin Bruner and Troy Molander. Connors remains on the board, and has advised Hawley on the tasks ahead as Telltale strives to be the big proponent of dramatic stories in games.

Here’s an edited transcript of our interview.

Above: Pete Hawley is CEO of Telltale Games

Image Credit: Telltale

GamesBeat: Do you want to go over what’s happened since you joined Telltale?

Pete Hawley: I joined two months ago. It’s been five years now since Walking Dead season one, which was an enormous hit for the company. We went on to do Minecraft, another giant hit. But from that success and that player base, how much people loved the company — through that revenue the company grew and grew. Pretty much doubled in size in the last couple of years. This year we released 17 episodes, which is a pretty phenomenal effort. Each episode is around two hours long. For a relatively small company that’s an insane amount of content.

One of the challenges over the last few years, as the company doubled in size and the amount of product going out increased exponentially — we just took our eye off the ball on innovation and quality. Before I took the job, the first thing I did was go on forums and app stores and try to get an idea of the voice of our players. It was clear that our games had become fairly predictable. The formula is loved, but it’s getting old. It’s time for us to innovate, get back to our roots, and do a much better job with fewer games.

We made the decision, going into 2018, that it’s better for us to get to three games next year and do our very best work again. Give ourselves some breathing room, time, space, get back to some real innovations. We’re closing the Walking Dead storyline with season four. We want to get back to our best with that. That’s coming in the summer. We’ll close out Batman in the first half of next year. We have a new IP that I can’t announce yet, but we’re really excited about it. We’re doing that for Q4.

We’ll do a better job on quality and innovation, as well as more platform-specific work on mobile, PS4, PC. More international distribution and better marketing. We just need time and space to do a great job of that. Restructure and reimagine ourselves a little. Unfortunately that came down to a layoff of 25 percent of our workforce, but now we’re down to our best bets, our best games, and our best people.

GamesBeat: When you decided to do the layoff, were you cutting some projects that were in a dubious state?

Hawley: No, no. There was certainly more on the slate for the 2018, but we just moved some things around as opposed to cancelling anything. Give the smaller teams a long time to get things right. I didn’t come in and cancel much. It’s just that if we’re going to do a great job with things, we need more time to do that. I don’t think we’ll do service to our players or ourselves by trying to squeeze all this into 2018. Clearly, the last two years, the idea that increasing the amount of product and the episode count doesn’t work. It’s never worked. The idea that you have one or two hits and then scale your business and hope that continues — in the end, if you don’t innovate, it stops.

Above: Batman: The Enemy Within is one of Telltale’s new hits.

Image Credit: Telltale

GamesBeat: I don’t know if Telltale has had what you would call an engine, but it’s had that same sort of choice-driven gameplay with a comic-book style, going back for years now. At one point it did seem like that was fairly innovative, but it often came with some cost to it as far as interactivity. Is that the thing that players have gotten tired of? Have you re-used that particular format a little too often, across too many games? What were some conclusions you had?

Hawley: There’s a couple of things that come to mind. One is, over the last couple of years — to some extent we’ve moved away from some of the magic of season one of Walking Dead. That real player agency and interactivity, that real sense of consequences has moved away. We’ve moved more toward pure narrative and let go of some of the — whether you call it gameplay, or just interactivity and engagement, we’ve actually moved away from it.

In many ways it’s not about changing who we are. It’s just getting back to what we did incredibly well in season one, plus more. We’re doing some great work for season four, which might surprise a few people. We’re taking the game and the gameplay in some different directions. But in the end, the company’s reputation and the love our players have for us because of what we do—I’m not here to turn this into a one-game MMO shop. We don’t have Blizzard envy. We’re storytellers.

In the future we’d like to innovate away from the four-choice wheel, but for now it’s what we do, it’s what people love, and it’s what people are asking us for, to get back to our best, and to ship and produce software that’s of high quality. Not just gameplay, but also no crashes, no glitches, really focus on the quality of the overall product. It’s not about a reinvention. It’s about getting back to doing our best work with our best people.

Above: Minecraft Story Mode (image: Telltale Games)

GamesBeat: Were 2017’s results less than what you guys had expected in some way? Did you have a combination of hits and misses? Or was it the overall audience declining? What made the company realize that it had to take some action?

Hawley: If you’re going to hire someone like me — I’m not one for the status quo. The games have been successful for the last five years, but this year I’d say — I wouldn’t say misses. We’ve generally seen strong revenues. We’re in a great position as a company. But in the end, some of what we signed up for just doesn’t work quite as well for us as some of the other choices we’ve made.

I said to the team, “I think we’re more Netflix or HBO than we are Hollywood.” Our game choices should reflect that. If you look at Wolf Among Us and Walking Dead, that’s some of what we’re going to get back to. That’s when Telltale is at its best, when we have real control and agency for the player and over the characters in the stories we tell. If you work with larger IP, you’re often very restricted. You have 50 or 60 years of expectations as far as who and what that is. We’ve been at our best when we hand control over to the player as far as the story and the destiny of the characters around it, the life and death choices they’re asked to make.

GamesBeat: Is it fair to say that we might see fewer things like Batman and more things based on newer IP?

Hawley: Yeah, for sure. We’re very proud of Batman. Some of the more recent reviews have said it’s the best treatment of the Joker as a character they’ve read for decades. I think we’re still doing great work. It’s done well for us. But really I think we’re best when we get back to the grittier, deeper, darker side with some of the IP we’ve worked with, and when we’re given real freedom of choice. We’re not playing in worlds or with characters that have very specific sets of rules and ideals and approval processes around them. We have more freedom when we take our own path.

Above: Clementine is a gun-wielding character in season three of Telltale’s The Walking Dead.

Image Credit: Telltale Games

GamesBeat: How many people do you have now? About 250 or so?

Hawley: 250 people, yeah. We’re building three games in the traditional way, and we have a big deal to announce next year for something a little more radical, which we’re super excited about. We’re going to make those four products next year, and then more third-party, which has been really successful. We’re 250 people, but we’re quite unique in that we’re a small private company, and we’re a developer and publisher. We have very good relationships with our publishing partners. We’re going to be funding and working with external teams to do more work there as we’ve done in the past. While not moving away from what we are as a company. We’re not going to start publishing first-person shooters.

GamesBeat: Has Telltale used those outside third parties much before?

Hawley: Yeah, we had great success publishing Seven Days to Die. That was a successful PC game and still is. We developed the console versions and published those. They’ve done incredibly well for us. Not story-based games in the traditional sense, but we love doing third-party deals with small teams that have seen success in certain areas, whether it’s Steam or others, and helping them get to other platforms because of our publishing relationships and distribution and marketing. We’ll be doing more of that over the next couple of years. Small teams who’ve built great games need to find an audience.

GamesBeat: As far as working with [former CEO] Dan Connors, what are you doing now? How have you figured out some of the roles here?

Hawley: Dan’s been great for me in the first couple of months, transitioning into this role, learning some of the history and the choices. He’s also been great at reminding me, hey, this is what was great about season one of Walking Dead and some of the other work we’ve done when we’ve been at our best. He’s helping me understand that DNA. I treat that with a great deal of respect. I’m not here to do anything radical.

Dan’s been great. He remains on the board. He doesn’t come to the office day to day, week to week, like any other of the board members of Telltale, but he’s there as a very helpful partner I can reach out to for support. He’s transitioned to the board set and he’s been very positive. I’m now in the office, I’m the CEO, and that’s it.

I respect the history and the time that’s passed, the successes we’ve had — you’ve known me for a while. I always think about the future, the go-forward, the people that are here, the games we’re making, the innovation, the things we’re going to do with the deals we’ve signed recently. I’m all about the future. I’m trying not to dwell on the past. But Dan’s been a great help in reminding me of what the company is about and when it’s been its best.

GamesBeat: You mentioned mobile, which hasn’t been your biggest platform. PC is traditionally the biggest, right?

Hawley: PC has been very strong, yeah. Console, particularly PS4, has been very strong for us. We have a great audience on mobile, though, and good revenues. Apple and Google do great work for us featuring our games. They love our games. There are some challenges for us there, especially the fact that our games can be as much as a two-gigabyte download. But to be fair, since we transitioned our tech with Batman, we didn’t really help ourselves as far as mobile.

While mobile isn’t a huge part of the business now, it’ll be much more in the future regardless of those file sizes. We can do a much better job as far as international. Crash rates and performance, how players interact on mobile, treating mobile as a really important separate platform — there’s more we can do there, for sure.

Above: Character from Telltale Games’ Game of Thrones episodic series.

Image Credit: Telltale

GamesBeat: What have you learned from the fans? Did they have a certain reaction to the layoffs? Have they given you some interesting feedback?

Hawley: They have, yeah. My Twitter feed is certainly more interesting than it used to be. [laughs] I listen to everyone. Since I got here we’ve improved our player support in terms of Zendesk and the folks that run that system. We’re getting closer to our players on social networks and through our ticket system. That was a huge part of my job for the last eight years, and it’s one of the first things we looked at.

Generally, I find that as far as feedback, players don’t care about how you’re running the business. They’re not really that interested in any news related to a layoff or whatever. But they do want to see us getting back to our best work and releasing quality software that’s bug-free and not frustrating for them. We’ve done a disservice to our players over the last few years. A lot of them have been really frustrated with some of the experiences they’ve had. When you’re doing too much and you’re working pretty much at threshold, it’s difficult to have that time to do that well and support them. The team’s done well given the circumstances, but we’re a small company.

I get a lot of feedback from players saying, “We love the story, it’s some of the best work you’ve done, but you just have to spend more time on quality. Less bugs. Less crashes.” We’ll be focusing on product quality when we release. That’s been the majority of the voices. And then obviously a huge amount of inbound about what they wish and hope we would work on next. That’s always a cool thing. It’s a quite unique position, when players can say, “Hey, this TV show or this movie should be a Telltale game.” Everyone understands what that means. I get a lot of inbound about what they’d like us to work on next. It’s pretty interesting.

GamesBeat: It sounds like you’ve found your path.

Hawley: Yep, I’m pretty busy. We’re super excited about next year, particularly some of the new stuff we’ll talk about soon. Getting into 2019 we’ll have some new IP to talk about, some original IP, and new gameplay too. The next couple of years, we’ll be locking in the road map soon and we’re really excited about it. Just took a couple of months to dig into the business and fix a few problems based on the last five years, but I think we’re in really good shape.

GamesBeat: Would you like to talk about anything else?

Hawley: People may be looking at us and thinking we’re in trouble, but in the end, we’re looking to the future. We’re super excited. I just think we had to take this time and opportunity to pause the production line, take some time out, re-establish who we are and what we’re great at, and take some more time and investment to get back to our best. I’ve spent some time collecting some pretty negative inbound, so I wanted an opportunity to talk about the position we’re in and how good we feel about the future.